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by ben7799
1128 days ago
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For sure. These things are luxury/billionaire bragging devices first and foremost. They get demoed, but they're not safe nor legal to use much of the performance on the street. And once you take it to the track you'll be hit with a massive bill to make it safe and then a bunch of restrictions because at the track they tend to do the math and actually be more rational about what is safe and what is not safe. F1 would not allow this car to race on its closed courses, and F1 is about the most demanding there is in terms of track safety. There are basically no tracks that are actually designed to be safe for the speeds this car can hit. Especially in the US where most tracks have a far lower safety factor designed in. |
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On the German autobahn there are parts without any speed limits so you can use all of the power there.
Also Nürburgring during public sessions is legally considered a public street (if you crash you will have to get police to make a report etc) so you can drive any road legal car there which the Nevera is.
> And once you take it to the track you'll be hit with a massive bill to make it safe and then a bunch of restrictions because at the track they tend to do the math and actually be more rational about what is safe and what is not safe.
Nah you can go to any track you want and the owner won't care (outside of you paying the damages if you crash).
The problems will arrive once you try to enter some racing series but Rimac could just create their own Nevara racing series just like a some supercars have.
But still the Nevera is not a race car. If it was it would have been built to fit into some racing series spec but it clearly isn't.